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What makes a loudspeaker loud?
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<blockquote data-quote="helotaxi" data-source="post: 5230716" data-attributes="member: 550915"><p>#2 above is not part of it. The final part of the trade is low frequency extension. So for example, you want an efficient system in a small box, it will suffer in the frequency extension department. You can get efficient low freq extension but it means a big box or you can get low freq extension in a small box but it will be very inefficient.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Terrible analogy. In your analogy, the different cars with the same power would perform very differently. A better analogy would be 2 different cars that run the same 1/4 with the same trap speed have different weights and thus require different power to achieve the same performance. To answer the OP's question, if the drivers had the same cone area and moved the same amount at the same frequency in the same box, they would have the same output.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="helotaxi, post: 5230716, member: 550915"] #2 above is not part of it. The final part of the trade is low frequency extension. So for example, you want an efficient system in a small box, it will suffer in the frequency extension department. You can get efficient low freq extension but it means a big box or you can get low freq extension in a small box but it will be very inefficient. Terrible analogy. In your analogy, the different cars with the same power would perform very differently. A better analogy would be 2 different cars that run the same 1/4 with the same trap speed have different weights and thus require different power to achieve the same performance. To answer the OP's question, if the drivers had the same cone area and moved the same amount at the same frequency in the same box, they would have the same output. [/QUOTE]
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What makes a loudspeaker loud?
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